Amazon says $51.19 $19.50 (29 used & new offers) If you decide to ask a question or submit an order, be sure to reply just to me and not to the whole Moneta list. Many inked notes throughout and back inside cover and flyleaf with inked index notes. obv: DN IVSTINIANVS PP AVG, helmeted and cuirassed bust of the emperor facing front, holding globe with cross (globus cruciger) and. I still use mine for emperors' dates, TRP dates, etc. $29.60(31 used & new offers) $39.19(25 used & new offers) Roman Roman Coins and Their Values, 4th edition, by David Sear. Kb Coins offers world coin collectors and world currency. The base of the cover of Asia is very worn (from use, sliding in and out of the shelf?). Byzantine Constans II, 641 668 Ad, Follie copper coin B1 SKU: Kbc 5001c About KB Coins. They look good with many inked notes throughout. This is a major book, but not worth that much! How about if I offer it, all there, with flaws I described, for much less than half price? Greek Greek Coins and Their Values, volumes 1 (Europe) and 2 (Asia), by David Sear. It was the only medieval coin with an Armenian inscription minted in Greater Armenia. The third picture shows: The first inscriptions in the Armenian language were found on this coin. These are some of the first coins with Armenian inscriptions. The cheapest used on AddAll is $522 + shipping from Europe. These coins are similar to Byzantine copper coins but engraved with the name of the King. Cover shows signifccant damage from damp but the interior pages and plates do not show damage. Amazon says Hardcover from $33.99 1 Used from $39.01 Collectible from $33.99 Byzantine Money of the Incipient Byzantine Empire, Anastasius I to Justinian, by Wolfgang Hahn. Amazon says,"Hardcover from $80.00 4 Used from $80.00" Byzantine East Roman Successors of the Sestertius, by Harlan J. Provincials are not easy to understand and he has a great deal to say. I know I have read it many times and take it on plane trips again and again. The best one-volume work on provincial coins. See here: Roman Provincial Coins Roman Provincial Coins by Kevin Butcher. GOT ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE FEEL FREE TO E-MAIL ME. Find the listing and see if it is marked "SOLD" in purple. Set of four c.5th-8th Century Byzantine coins largest diameter is approx. The books, listed below, and others, are offered here: which you can check to see if they are still available. The chief mints of the western Mediterranean were Carthage and Ravenna.I recently added some important ancient-coin books and some Byzantine coins. In the eastern Mediterranean, the primary mints remained Constantinople, Thessaloniki, Nicomedia, and Antioch, in addition to Cyzicus and Alexandria. Many of the coins found at the street level in the commercial district and in the Northern Cemetery are folli, including the follis of Tiberius II Constantine found in Room H of the Our Lady Monastery.Īnastasius I in 498 originated a coinage reform to the empire, during which there were four active mints: Constantinople, Thessaloniki, Nicomedia, and Antioch.Īfter the reconquests of Justinian I in the sixth century, more mints opened in the eastern and western parts of the empire. In 512, a 5-nummi coin (marked with “E”) was introduced, along with the doubling of the weight of the three existing coins. Initially, beginning in the reign of Anastasius I in 498, there were two additional copper coins, the half-follis (worth 20 nummi, marked with a “ K”) and a decanummium (worth 10 nummi, marked with an “I”). 527-565), AE follis, Antioch as Theoupolis mint, issued 553-554. The copper follis, worth 40 nummi (the coin of least monetary value), is identifiable by the letter “ M” (indicating 40 in Greek). Sale 120 (Apr 19) Byzantine Silver & Bronze Coins. Smaller in value were the gold semissis and tremissis. At Beth Shean, ten gold solidi, dating from the reigns of Maurice Tiberius through the co-rulership of Heraclius and Heraclius Constantine, were found as a hoard in the Our Lady Monastery. The standard was the gold solidus, weighing 1/72 of a Roman pound, or 24 carats (roughly 4.55 grams). Beginning in 615, there was also one silver coin type. Byzantium in Late Antiquity, continuing Roman Imperial systems of coinage, issued three gold coin types and four or five copper types.
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